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Political Therapeutics: Dialogues and Frictions Around Care and Cure
Authors:Cristiana Giordano
Institution:1. Department of Anthropology, University of California, Davis, California, USAcgiordano@ucdavis.edu
Abstract:ABSTRACT

In 1978, Italy passed a law establishing the abolition of the mental hospital. Up to that time, the traditional asylums were still governed by the 1904 law that positioned psychiatry within the criminal justice system by assigning it the function of custodia (control, custody) rather than of cura (care). In the 1960s and 1970s, Italian psychiatrist Franco Basaglia initiated a movement of de-institutionalization of the mentally ill that revolutionized psychiatric care in Italy. It also had a deep impact on restructuring the psychiatric system in other European and Latin American countries. In this article, I discuss the different psychiatric practices and imaginaries that resulted from the movement of democratic psychiatry and Basaglia’s visions for a community-based and diagnosis-free care of the mentally ill. I ethnographically trace what I call the “Basaglia effect” in today’s psychiatric practices, and focus on ethnopsychiatry as a counter clinic that emerged from Basaglia’s legacy. I reflect on the frictions between care and cure that ethnopsychiatry re-articulates and works with in the context of contemporary migrations to Europe.
Keywords:Basaglia  care  cure  ethnopsychiatry  Italy  migration  psychiatry
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